Does your heart pound for paleoscience? Know others who feel the same?

Propose a new PAGES' working group to address a scientific question in an internationally coordinated way. The application deadline is Thursday 19 April 2018 at 17:00 UTC.

You must contacta member of the PAGES Scientific Steering Committee to discuss your plans at least two weeks before you submit the proposal.​ Applications received without SSC member notification will not be looked upon favorably.

World Data Service for Paleoclimatology: New requirements for contributors

Through the establishment of standard terms to describe proxy and reconstruction data, NOAA/National Centers for Environmental Information's World Data Service for Paleoclimatology (WDS-Paleo) is enhancing its capabilities to make data findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable in support of data-intensive science. As such, there will be new terminology requirements for data submissions in 2018.

Important notes for data contributors

Starting on 1 March 2018, contributors will be required to provide metadata for variables (i.e. what was measured or reconstructed) using new standard terms when contributing most data to the WDS-Paleo. Additionally for data synthesis projects, WDS-Paleo will also request that a liaison for the project coordinate their data contribution with our staff in advance of submission.

"I am extremely delighted to see the launch of the ECN," says Dr. Loutre. "PAGES has always been strongly committed to supporting the participation of early-career researchers (ECRs) in its activities. With the launch of the ECN we go a step further.

"Senior researchers can bring their expertise and experience in the running of our project while ECRs may provide enthusiasm and fresh ideas. ECRs will of course continue to take part in the different working group activities. I hope that the ECN will contribute to develop professional skills and prepare the ECRs to become strong senior leaders of tomorrow."

PAGES is pleased to announce the launch of two new working groups today.

Climate Reconstruction and Impacts from the Archives of Societies (CRIAS) aims to improve the use of society's archives - personal documents, narrative sources, archival materials, early instrumental observations, and artefacts such as flood markers - in reconstructing historical climate variability and human impacts. Read more and sign up to their mailing list here.

Cycles of Sea-Ice Dynamics in the Earth system (C-SIDE) aims to reconstruct changes in sea-ice extent in the Southern Ocean for the past 130,000 years, reconstruct how sea-ice cover responded to global cooling as the Earth entered a glacial cycle, and to better understand how sea-ice cover may have influenced nutrient cycling, ocean productivity, air-sea gas exchange, and circulation dynamics. Read more and sign up to their mailing list here.

Members of the PALSEA2 working group recently published a paper in Nature Communications on past sea level in French Polynesia, citing the region as ideal for paleo sea-level studies for extracting accurate information on the melting history of ice sheets.

Led by Nadine Hallman, the authors reconstruct a high-resolution sea-level curve encompassing the last 6000 years based on a comprehensive study of coral microatolls, which are sensitive low-tide recorders.

Access the paper, titled "Ice volume and climate changes from a 6000 year sea-level record in French Polynesia", here.